Apple's 20 Percent Rally Is Tough Pill for 295 Funds That Just Bailed

Apple Inc.’s third-quarter rally is unwelcome news to the unusually large swath of investors who have been giving up on the stock.

Shares of the iPhone maker have jumped 20 percent this quarter, trouncing the S&P 500 Index. At the same time, the number of its institutional owners has fallen 1.3 percent to 3,847 since June as 295 firms sold out of their positions entirely, a 28 percent increase from three months ago, according to regulatory filings compiled by Bloomberg.

It’s another blow for active managers who are trailing the market by the most in more than a decade based on full-year results. Apple’s share gain was about 15 times the S&P 500 as Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook’s product plans eased concern over the company’s future growth.

“Fund managers across the board are being guilty of being too conservative,” Jeffrey Sica, who oversees $1.5 billion as the president of Circle Squared Alternative Investments in Morristown, New Jersey, said by phone. “The lack of innovation at Apple has been what’s kept a lot of investors away. They held back and it did hurt them.”

Sentiment over Apple turned sour as the company ended 13 straight years of uninterrupted sales growth earlier in 2016. Omega Advisors Inc. and Lansdowne Partners are among firms who exited the shares in the second quarter. Since the end of June, Apple buyers have fallen 4.6 percent while sellers, including those who cut stakes or exited completely, increased 4.4 percent.

Growing pessimism turned out to be misplaced as the stock staged the biggest quarterly rally in two years. Even as the S&P 500 suffered its biggest retreat since the U.K’s vote to exit the European Union over the past week, Apple shares stood as one of the biggest winners.

The stock has advanced more than 2 percent every day since last Friday. T-Mobile US Inc. and Sprint Corp. said they’d received almost four times as many orders for the iPhone 7 as previous models, fueling speculation that the new product is off to a faster start than usual.

Misjudgments of Apple have backfired in the past. In 2014, when most professional investors decided Apple euphoria was wearing thin, the stock surged 38 percent, beating the S&P 500 by the most for any largest American company since Microsoft Corp.’s 49 percent outperformance during the Internet boom a decade ago. That year, eight of 10 funds focusing on large growth stocks trailed their benchmark.

Fund performance is already on a fragile footing this year. According to Bank of America Corp., only 15 of large-cap funds have beat their benchmarks, on course for their worst year since at least 2003.